Formless wrote:So why is it so hard for you to grasp that religion can be harmful?
Have I denied it? Of course religion can be harmful. So can traditions, political beliefs, hammers... But that's a far cry from saying that it's so badwrong that it should be completely eliminated. Or that humanity would be better off without it.
Formless wrote:Last I checked, Mormons (being a subset of Christianity) still obeyed "thou shalt not have any god before me". Indignation doesn't change that.
Some help: Inactive means I don't go to church. "Mormon" means that at some point in my life, I was baptized.
Formless wrote:Now, if you want to claim that you don't in fact believe in God or the church or any of that shit, why the fuck are you so defensive about it? Serious question. I'm not making any unreasonable assumptions here.
What a curious question... Why would I be able to say nice things about an organization whose beliefs I don't entirely share (I do share some, though my concept of God isn't one of them)?
I have a lot of respect for the Mormon church. Despite the fact that I don't believe a lot of what the church says, that doesn't mean that they haven't influenced me in ways that I consider really good. And when someone pulls off an amazing knee-jerk response founded on nothing but complete and utter bullshit, I'm not going to be entirely quiet about it.
Zinegata wrote:Maj has a point. Religion does not necessarily make people do bad things. They may use it to justify doing bad things, but even rational science can twisted and used to justify commiting evil acts too. To say that every religious person is an intolerant, book-burning extremist, is to also say that every person who believes in evolution believes in eugenics and genocide.
Formless wrote:Its not that she's defending evolution-- its that she's trying to act like its a moral authority.
I'm not deliberately trying to do that. Seriously, how can Evolution tell people how to act?
I've always accepted Evolution as a theory, but nothing made me behold the power of it as much as giving birth. The experience was so powerful that I can't even put it into words, but the net result is that I ask why a lot more. Some of those questions are easy to understand, but others aren't. And one of those questions is:
Why do people believe weird and wacky shit?
Believing weird and wacky stuff is not the domain of a minority of people - it's the domain of most people across history. If it's accepted that people on this forum
don't also believe weird and wacky stuff, then it seems to me that disbelieving takes one hell of a lot of hard work and effort.
So why do people believe it? I don't really know... But I wish I did, and there are lots of people - scientists included - who want to know, too.
Until then, I'm not willing to throw the baby out with the bath water and declare belief in wierd and wacky shit to be stupid, wrong, completely harmful, whatever. I'm totally willing to compromise, however, and say that some people who believe weird and wacky shit may be stupid, and/or wrong, and/or dangerous.
Metahive wrote:Both [Science and Religion] however try to explain the same thing, reality.
I actually don't really see that. Religion - in my mind, at least - deals with questions like "What's our purpose?" or "Why are we here?" Science doesn't touch those. Further, Religion, especially of the organized variety - again, in my mind - was also the origin of systems meant to enable people to live together. It dealt with questions like "Is killing a bad thing to do?" or "Reasons why you shouldn't screw your best friend's wife." Again, those aren't the realm of Science.
Zinegata wrote:And that's why religion and science can, in fact, co-exist.
Religion and Science have coexisted for millennia. It's only been relatively recently that people believe they can't.
Given these conundrums, and the Confucianism thing, I think I have to take a step back and look at this from a more basic angle:
What
is religion?